The reviews are sorted alphabetically by authors' last name -- one or more pages for each letter (plus one for Mc).
All but some recent reviews are listed here. Links to those reviews appear on the
Recent Feature Review Page.

Balefires by David Drakereviewed by Mario Guslandi
This book collects a bunch of stories previously published in various magazines and anthologies between 1967 and 2004,
displaying the many faces of a literary chameleon able to easily jump from a genre to the other.
Predictably, the book includes such a variety of themes, styles and atmospheres to constitute an interesting showcase of the author's
fictional work but also a tour de force for the average reader with well defined literary preferences.

The Far Side of the Stars by David Drakereviewed by Peter D. Tillman
This is the third in the author's RCN series, light space opera books starring Lt. Daniel Leary, a
young starship captain in the Republic of Cinnabar Navy, and his faithful and deadly Signal Officer Adele Mundy.
The RCN series is his SF tribute to Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey/Maturin Master & Commander series -- itself a
knockoff of Forester's Hornblower stories.

Mistress of the Catacombs by David Drakereviewed by Cindy Lynn Speer
Prince Garric of the Isles has growing concerns over the Moon Wisdom cult that has recently sprung up. His
concerns increase when one of his spies, who after meeting with the cult is constantly tortured by evil
dreams, disappears before his eyes. The Intercessor of Laut requests an audience, and Prince Garric chooses
the neutral ground of a garden bridge. The Intercessor is actually a wizard, who tricks Garric into looking
into the pond. He topples into the water, and his long time friend, Cashel, dives in after him.

With The Lightnings by David Drakereviewed by Donna McMahon
Our hero, Lieutenant Daniel Leary, walks around the
streets of Kostroma City, pausing to think about his entire life, remember every detail of the space navy's
armaments, and contemplate the history and politics of the galaxy for the last five decades. Meanwhile, our
heroine, librarian Adele Mundy, builds bookshelves and sorts old books while contemplating her own tragic past.
It isn't until things begin rolling with a political double-cross and civil uprising that the book becomes interesting.

With the Lightnings by David Drakereviewed by Peter D. Tillman
A more descriptive title might be "The Lieutenant & the Librarian." Lt.
Daniel Leary is a supernumerary diplomat and Adele Mundy, the Electoral
Librarian, is the lone survivor of her family's political massacre on the planet Cinnabar.
Leisurely at the beginning, once a coup unfolds, the action becomes
fast and furious -- as well as clever and fun.

Queen of Demons by David Drakereviewed by Victoria Strauss
What lifts this novel and before it, Lord of the Isles, well
beyond the ordinary run of epic fantasy is the outstanding world-building.
It's rare to read books that evoke a period and a culture as vigorously as
is done for Drake's imaginary realm of the Isles. He's built a fictive society
as vivid, consistent, and believable as any real one.

Lord of the Isles by David Drakereviewed by Alex Anderson
Is David Drake cashing in on the fantasy quest epic?
Not according to Alex. It is something we haven't
seen in the genre since Stephen Donaldson's epic saga.

Patriots by David Drakereviewed by Thomas Myer
When Thomas received his copy, he had to read
the opening scene six times. Not because it was bad writing, or a complex
scene. Nope. This novel does not start with a platoon of 200-ton tanks
rushing the berms on some distant hellhole planet, nor does it open
with a withering artillery barrage. And Thomas has come to expect that from Drake.